Making springs

loewen43

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I have an antique pistol and I've been trying to make some parts for it. I've used 2 types of steel to make the trigger return spring and the hammer spring. I've gone online and done some research but I haven't been able to make it work yet. Trigger return spring has snapped with both types of steel. Hammer spring snapped with one and the other I can't make the steel hard enough. Even after quenching and tempering. I used cold rolled flat bar for both once already and I chopped up some masonry tools for the other set. I have one what I've read online to go off of and minimal tools. Any advice helps. Thanks!
 
Not sure what size spring, but I've used the spring out of a pen before and it worked good.

Might be the wrong size but I thought I would throw that out there.
 
Not sure what size spring, but I've used the spring out of a pen before and it worked good.

Might be the wrong size but I thought I would throw that out there.

It's not that type of spring. It's 2 3/4 inches long 1/4 inch wide and 1/16 inch thick. It's not a coil spring
 
use a hardenable steel, quench it and then temper it back to spring softness. Should come out the oven a purplish color

O1 or 1084 are easy

If they are snapping you need to temper more
 
use a hardenable steel, quench it and then temper it back to spring softness. Should come out the oven a purplish color

O1 or 1084 are easy

If they are snapping you need to temper more

The masonry tool I cut up for the hammer spring came out purplish. I put it in the gun and it looked promising. Cocked it 3 times and the fourth time I snapped it
 
use a hardenable steel, quench it and then temper it back to spring softness. Should come out the oven a purplish color

O1 or 1084 are easy

If they are snapping you need to temper more

What do you mean by temper more... Hotter or longer? I did for 2 hours at 350 fahrenheit
 
The masonry tool I cut up for the hammer spring came out purplish. I put it in the gun and it looked promising. Cocked it 3 times and the fourth time I snapped it

Good stuff

Heat treating is tough enough when you know the steel you are working with

Sometimes you get lucky with random steel but I never have
 
If they are snapping you need to temper more

As suggested, if they are snapping they are too hard, you are getting the correct amount of heat for the correct amount of time to temper it properly.

AND/OR

There are defects in your work :( - spring should be smooth & polished, no scratches, file marks or sharp edges.

Make it, polish it, harden it, polish it again, temper it ... you'll get there. keep trying.
 
What do you mean by temper more... Hotter or longer? I did for 2 hours at 350 fahrenheit

Sparling is right - 350f is way too cold, 500 is pretty low as well, depending on how much carbon is in the steel you are looking to get anywhere from 600 - 700/750ish.

You are letting it air cool - right? not quenching it after your temper? Also - for a thin flat spring - I'm assuming you are doing this in your oven? Bring the heat up slowly/ish and let it cool slowly - i.e. just turn the oven off and play some video games for half an hour or so.

Some little toaster ovens will work much better than the big one in the kitchen. ;)
 
Well - Cold rolled bar stock probably doesnt have enough carbon in it to respond to heat treating. On the other hand chisels, etc may have too much carbon in them, and possibly other elements, making the end result too brittle.
 
I used to be a technician with an engineering school and I lab teched a lot of materials classes. I found that yellow hot, cool slow, make the shape, yellow hot and quench, then just barely make dark red with a torch and you make a spring...

But we were just teaching engineering students the concepts of carbon steel, not making usable parts.
 
You can't make a spring out of cold rolled steel.

You can not properly heat treat just any high carbon steel without knowing what it is.

Pay someone who knows the what and how to... to make your springs...
 
Sparling is right - 350f is way too cold, 500 is pretty low as well, depending on how much carbon is in the steel you are looking to get anywhere from 600 - 700/750ish.

You are letting it air cool - right? not quenching it after your temper? Also - for a thin flat spring - I'm assuming you are doing this in your oven? Bring the heat up slowly/ish and let it cool slowly - i.e. just turn the oven off and play some video games for half an hour or so.

Some little toaster ovens will work much better than the big one in the kitchen. ;)

I'm using a little toaster oven. It goes to 500 degrees. I let it cool down in the oven to room temp on it's own
 
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